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Geant ATONE YE ERI Niner } “Fetandard hada direst pipe line.’ bs % than @ fight against us as individ. ay tl really an attack against ie A , DINAMITE SPR HAVO INSTR —THRONG AT FE "One Hundred Persons Injured ‘When Flames Ignite Big Store of Explosive. TRAINMEN ARE HEROE ‘Fight Fire as They Race Away +. with Car of Dynamite Panic in Boulder, Col. ¢ \ — BOULDER, © * qtarted early to-th | Bouthern freight Gapot here destroyed the depot with and, ~enveloped a powder-house 1.0% pounds of dynamite { ploded with tremendous shoc Aug. 1—Fire that rin the Colorado and a Yast quantity of: freigtic distance of apreading « n feet, containing which ex njuring perhaps one hundred persons and £ breaking the plate-glass in ey pusl reas house In the city ax, well aa the Pwindows In hundreds of resid [ & belleved that two of the injured P die. I The property Joxs is estimated at * $200,000. The fire ia believed to have been incendiary | Twenty - f the tn 1 were taken @ hospitals others were remo { , to their homes. ‘The fatally injured: | tRoy La Favre, volunteer fren | Boulder; lke O. Wilson, volunt | ‘@reman. Boulder. | When the alarm was first only a sina Bl West end of the hhasdicaoped by fought bravely alfa ton’ of explosives wax store Bearby. No warning war given ond| when the shect. tron shack contalning | the dynamite split open with a do roar the men manning tie hos Devery person within a radius 0 were led to wn blo | or waole contre Scarcely had the eddying «in the explosion dritted away of “‘olunteers rushed myo houses and, Sehting tele w ibe chok: Ie und Hames séveral kegs of giant po w toned tv explode i out Wiely arms” to On ‘a sidetrack at the P 1 of the burning. « st00d ntainins eight tons af dynamite nite the fact that cliders wer fajling on the root 4s Hitiin fleke of tame were ap on ite walls, a withing crew backe down and co ed te the smouldering cars and while the lake Guise eontion 4 ariwo iniles into’ te € It was left on i wideiriek der Club's weekly reception been ended, and many men} and women w wing on the xide- walk 9 few bl te thir carriers, Af them were blown olf force ‘of the explosion. All the win- dows io the University Building, a@ mile and na hale distant, were blown Out and the plaster fell from the walls Ad a ceiingn oF then mel by | Unirty treigot cars were F3 destroyed with their able merchandise. gerous explosives: w the depot and that aware of thy fact wdject of a righ suthorities. Ratlwa that the storage te only Pending shipment to The mio ._—“-_l STANDARD OL \ BUMPED HARD BY ~JUOGELACOMBE contents ¢ fact that dan-| « explaley| temporary | Right of the Interstate Com- merce Commission to En-_ | force Rules Upheld. Judge Lacombe in the United States Grouit. Court 1-day. dealt a stinging blow to what ja bellayed to have been fan effort of the Standard Ol Company to hamper a rival In the matter of de- | livery of crude ol] from the Pennsyl- Vania oi! feds Last winter the Preston & Davia Com- ny, an Independent concern, of Bro Binsecured un order from the Intot= staie Commerce Commission forcing the Delawure, Lackawanna and Weal: @ Rallway Cempany to carry Its oll wpply from) Pennsylvania, “he Lack~ ayanna then soteht an infunetion Mngt the Commision restralning it ftom enforcing the decision, Judge La holds that the Commission ‘ha jplediction, ~ ho cabo has been, desperately fought fi) the courte with the Standard O11 attornoys backing the railway legal Fightts, jt Is sald. It is the drat at- tempt of any trunk line or common i er to question tthe Jurisdiction of the commission In its control of Inter- state commerce. Former State Senator § Davis, one of tho firm members, carly | inthe case, declared that it war merely Lan effort of the Standard Oi! Company welch a rival. to “We have to ship by cars where! the h Said to-day. ‘This ie a reat adyats but they ate not satisfied. Tt in t rivals of a gigant{o ma: Meet We will Nght the cane to the i for the Deteware, Tacka- if Ln ‘Western, or, the Standart ) retuned tp Nasouaa Judge Al civion of tte portent as 9, i Wixole Grecicy-a There have been girls who loved, whose hatred r of Pe Charges of hi no nas the girl who got venxe is not, genera cessarfly because women are either too,jender or too good for it, but be- Struggle of Young ‘Woman Against Giant Monopoly Will Stand Out in History as an Extraordinary Achiebement. FATHER VICTIM. OF THE TRUST. Daughter First Forced John D. from His «THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1907. | ‘The Girl Who Got Even With Great Standard Oil Company: | Ida Tarbell, Heroine in Long and Winning Fight for Reve mee eh Thirty-econd street, Port Morrts. was holding a little black kitten shen [it sipped and fell into the water, | “Ob, Kitty ‘will drown," sobbed: May — | 3 | excitedly n é SVM et he sald ‘Thomas Ryan, siopping long enough to remove hie cap and jey it carefully on the fies pier, Then he Jumped into the water,” h kitten were'tangied. ‘The screams of the other children ‘ brouwht to the scene James Driscoll. = \Man Jumps ‘to Rescue, and{consumptive. who. comes over: trom tne and hospital each day to work in the | Both Have to Be. Fished nalr on the Meas’ Department pier, Out by Gop. imped in after the | boy, ‘ It happened to be deeper than Tommy. expected and be disappeared beneath | the surtace wit a surprised gurgie. as rose It waa seen that he and the pent dae Ss i whe Vthe man Bnd drew iin pe. peath te murtace. ‘They: were splashing | — i thnd together, when Policeman Kletn, the Alexander avenue station, rag Up and fished them out. iscoll was hurried over to the hos-. e thade history; b yaala, stands preeminently 'n the chronicles of famous y speak iclentiy conatat- ry out a fixed root ie Few Vengeful Women in History In history 1 ar with th the nal who stand for risingly few. Com- of those who passion | of pg or allured, ine love, count at all, who were they? Holofernes's Judith, who yead; Janel, w Sisera’s nium who danced John the Bapttat death; Charlotte Corday, who 0 bloody: terrorint. of the Won Ja his bathtub, AL liese achieved a terrible, but brief and fatit iKeance for th vic is died. Ida M. Tarbell, ose father was of the feast significant victims of busines« me! hods which created the Standard Oli Company and made John De Kockefoller the richest map tn. th ® has united all these vengeances 4 Mfetine of the man wius For by the revelauions of her great history of the Siandurd Oil she has cut John D. ss more acquir aol pat his nd Ko than ed malt reer citer era head whut head Itwelf—jt» driven into It tr halo Lo mest. arf s-Unee smart tweabe ions were acquired f publi opin stand plotied the fabulous WAL meant puin to so many of rt ows, and atabbed him with the coid, cigar truth about himaelt tr Ida sM. ‘Tarbell forced John D. ockefeller from hiv cuatle of alle 6 DOW com to the ¢ Aree abe brought axainst tt himself Forced Him to Public Explanation. | Miss ‘Tarbell's book," | Have read sald the Of Ki a question read let #0. my ‘s weal once In Diy es him in. siated on getting cash have waver been tor eh-tor the mistake he made.” cynically, infeed has soccessfully kot cash and So, coldly, Feo hie who a of werid mind Aim that pen ix mightier, {han | the pockgtbook, Neyerthtless, so de the wound ta the Rockefeller 9 Be Mias Tarvell’s attack rile among the Oll King's never to mention her name before bim. Minx the of] business, of fi All book Tt im ieasy to-ace Diishment andard O41 stock, Ti ald popularity of her history | Standard Oil forced the Rocke- ny to ixsue a book In: reply rhud and treachery It compelled a ent fram John D. Rockéfeller: n grimly. in 1 can say response in there wouht t nk ‘ar you int for Mins Tarbell'« father was War wanted Wer offered but he: in- In the ent he the richest man ot he OWENS fought this “bat- {nat millione and Cymer toort be ont pret th tesa tay the brain | Citadel of Silence by Her Probed Treachery and Fraua. By Nicola Greeley-S mith: UDGE - LANDIS. by imposing 4 $29,000,000 fine on the Standard Oil Company last great monopoly and at ‘John dD. Rockefeller. The first and greatest blow, and that which perhaps has brought about all the others, was struck by a woman, who, sacrificing all the softer experiences that make up an ordinary woman’s life, dedi- cated her days and nights to private vengeance for a great wrong. Revenge is sweet — expecially to women.” Byron uttered this aphorism near- Hty-ahundred: years ave, Buti re- mained for Ida M. Tarbell, a young Ameritan woman, to prove it near- ly a century later. girls who bated, and whose love/and Ida M. Tarbell, the tall, gray-eyed ut ing, & Woman's passion. This Is not. Guently associate editor. I worked very | hard, but soon discovered that ta dlf- | fuse one's self, aa an editor muat discouraged any other sort of work, | accomplish anything worth while one j should have a specialty. 1 had airead, | written several sketchen of the lives of the women of the French Revolution for the Chautauquan. ‘Later T went to Paris to eauin my- felt for my life work. I becanre % cor iributor to the MeClure Syndicate. and rventually wrote the life of Napoleon, followed by that of Lincoln, for Me- Clure's Magazine, and becamé an asso- ciate editor of the magazine, "One day we were digcussing in edito- ial conclave the best way of handling the subject of the Trust in the mag. zine. We had different ‘deax 1 sug- gested taking the subject in its concrete rather than in its abstract form and us- Ing the Standard Oil Company as the concrete example of the Trust. from every point of view. It wax « subject of which I long had kiowledge, and had access to accurate sources of Informa- tion, Mr. McClure and Mr. Phillips cer- tainly showed courage in consenting to allow mr to undertake this task.” Thos modestly the greatest. woman writer of history spoke of the greatest revenge ever achieved by a woman For Ida M. ‘Tarbell fiax not only achieved a perfect revenge for the ruin of-ter-tather-by-the standard -ON, bat in #0 doing has created an income of $12,000 a year for herself, and -has done more than any one elxe to develop,pub- He sentiment’ againat the greatest of trusts, She has turned e great private Lxrtevance to public promt and her own Aid VG? WHOTS THEA Te MLS” Veura id--now proves the truth of that other Byronle stanza: And if we do but waich the hour There never yet was huts To cf Which ‘could ‘evade it unterkiven The patient search and vigil lone | | Of’nimy''S'ho Treanures ups wrone MOORS IN ATTACK LAUGHTERED BY to pay | {Three Thousand Routed by Pores “of Gens Bride ——-Neat Casablanca; t TANGIER; while Aug. 10.-Gen. Drude, encamped outside Casablanca, and she l¢ spoken of In whispers and| has been attacked by 3,000 Moors, Ac- attempted fellar personnel He doesn't t Perhaps not Interested the sneers among hink But Téa M, Tarbell. baa! Stlmap whole world In what she the Rocke- "Tar-barrel.”? ‘aid a near relative scetle-of-the Oghting the aseault ler to me ‘ar-barrel. Mr. Rockefeller think of| heavy slaughter among the natives, t Cleveland, of her,’ thinks of John D. Rockefeller, Story ofthe Wrongs Avenged. ery My producers, frankly. Miss ‘Tarbell when asked tg tell how | achieved her revenge compiled was brqught up, In the oll regions. father was one of the early oll d. The bitternes+ of the producers of olf neyer knew any mitigation: Niners of oll. ground. My: ‘men who saw created and thelr hands, Mefs wax that ‘Aat through compromise such the developed One of my as 1 lived. father was one concessions and fell to the re- on a dattle- of those business they had wrested from earlest be- A min connected) with the Standard Ol] Company was.a man simply who was notin the penitentiary. arew older I realized that thers ; Must be two sides to the uestion, and merely to satisfy my Intellectual ‘curl osity T began to Invest! ite the matter and try to comprehend the point of view of the other side. e to be said on the otfier aide, waya ts, There was:something There a In the play of natural forces, of contending human interests, of alert @ minds, in ot death, matic fetion. T conceived Prehend ali the of the oll field about 60,000 -word teurish 6nough, and actually In my youthtulrambition a trilogy which would cam- a ex of the Batra w all crude and ama- Ready for Her Life Work. infer trom the atruggisa of the ol] producer, it was necessary for you may me to earn my writer on the pa ving. I becamo « tauquan: and subse- ‘cording 10 the latest reports trom the was { repulsed, the French artillery causing { The Sultan of Morocco, through Ban the Moroccan Forelgn Minister, haw transmitted to the French Consul at | Fex an expression of the deep grief ‘with which he learned of the tion of the Europeans at ; Saying that no one more than he jdemned the aot which cost Ave French Hives"? | ‘The Hultan added that he wax ready |to accord any satisfaction demanded, notably the dismissal of the Pasha of Casablanca and the punishment of the gullty persons. The French Consular Agent at Al- cazar and the French resident of that place baye fied to El-Aratsh, ‘A steamer loaded with provisions and troops, salled ffdm here for Casablanca to-day, The Frenoh armored crulser sJeatine @’Arc remains at this port to reassure the Europeans. In obedience to Girect ordera from Paris the French warships arriving here continue to: salute the Moorish fiak in order to show that France iv not at war with Morocco, ‘Anothor battalion of the Foreign Le- gion has been ordered to prepare for shipment to Morocco. a CARDINAL SVAMPA DBAD, |BOLOGNA, Italy, Aug. 10.—Cardinal Demenico Bvampa, Archbishop of Be- oH ii degra eve. Os rae ore is alge | sweek struck the latest blow at the ~BEGS SON NUT —TOTELL MOTHER Crushed Just Before Boy Brings His Luncheon. who John Gallagher, his been em ployed axa brakeman by the New York, twenty years, was fataily cri dd de- 4 throng of passengerdon the West. chester station. i ef freight cars. when a shunted down upon doth Jegn at the thigh tree hint, car ity kept him conscious nL th ALLor, Bhe ja bapilved,tather die happy His strength jeft him as be expressed thin wish and he fell back senseless on the bed. He died shortly afterward He lived with his far on had the e he CRUISERS SAIL FROM MANILA TO Maryland Grounds While bering Cavite Harbor, —_but-Is-Refloated. MANILA, Aug. 10.—The armored cruisers Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Maryland and Colorado sailed to-day via Yokohama and Honolulu, to join Ad- miral Evans’ feet. The Maryland grounded upon, sailing {out of Cavite harbor but was refloated in Dal an-hour uninjured TEN KILLED IN WRECK ON SPANISH RAILWAY, MADRID, Aug, 10.—The Southern Ex- press was derailed to-day near Aloansa, and later was run into by a freight train, Both trains caught fire, and it in reported that len pergons lost thelr lives. ‘The disaster occurred In the tunnel of Otzaurte near Alsasua, Province of Navarre, a station on the Northern Railway, ‘The yalley of Cegana tw ns- cended through twelve tunnels, reach- Ing the culmination point of the line, over 3,000 feet above the level bf the sea, In the middle of the tunnel beyond Otzaurte, which is two miles long. Atter the wreck of the two trains and the subsequent fire the tunnel acted as a chimney, fanning the flames and creating 9: panty among the survivors who sought to escape from the smoke and heat. 600 HOMELESS BY BLAZE IN MANILA MANILA, Aug. 10—Fire in Manila this afternoon destroyed 120 nativg houses snd made 6) heraons homeless. ‘Tne damage Is estimated at 65,000 pes ‘The fire originated from an Re wire, No one w: Yan are being cared for, « Brakeman Gallagher Faially New Haven and Hartford Railroad for) tween two trains, to-day within view of| He was waiting to couple two trains! was cutting | off Policeman Dil- + lon, of the Westchester station, assisted by several courageous women, inade hy tourniquets for the stumps of the in- | %f the present wave of’ crime, tn hix jured man’s legs. His remarkable Vitale! Mind, Ix the class of immigrants that arrival of an ambulance surgeon trom rordoxm Then bans Willow Mayor waess little JOIN EVANS" FLEET electric, injured, ‘The home- | “NATION ON EARTH, SWS REL PETERS cations Cause t | } Too Many Crime Wave, Declares tured Skull. While scores of Germans were war tins —andorodelting —thetr—songs—orer countless steins early to-day in the | loon of David Warner, No, 242 East} Preacher. | aireet, an argument aruse be: i — a tween, th bartender, Herman Kolk. | twen four, > lives in “the same The Rey, Madison C. Peters has pre-| | pared what lu calls u series of thoughts on the wiye. He will elaborate | them in n sermon to be delivered to- | morrow morning o'clock in the} Tent Kvangel, B and Fitty- seventh street) He daex not spare th elty officials who now on thelr cations, Likewise he ra the Police Depuartment fieeholaers in general Hut the most important crime to, at il akwa y the be | and public ne of- | of all causes fre now coming Into this country, mak- {ig it, be says. the anost criminal na to pul | Mayor's Office Littie Filled. | “There never was « time Jy the his- tory of New York when the office wcupled ax to-day J. The judges are on vacations, When they do work. in the winter months, they work four or five hours a day for five days a week Consequently criminals crowd — the Tombs waiting by the vear for trials, | And often, when are brought to liridl, the politicians Interfere, until tt | nas become generally known among the | | Our courts itre clos they cropks of the country that (here Ix no place as xafe to tommit. crime as tn | New York Clty | Wee-vlo-not-hrng-erea!celminel Jival until the public bas forgotten Uh érlime. A prompt trial and speedy forcement of the penalty would bring {terror 10 the heurtx of the eriminals \Cerien the men at the head of IPollce Depariment—the Commissioner and bis deputies—are honest and clean fiae.. but hw cope moras abode | en ur they {poe Wikinews FRAY era RE RTAT mate What we need In men at (he head fof the partment who, are tralned an —etegant—yoing ty i * » Interviewed a goodly number of pa men and they tell me that df they do their duty and enforce }the law, the Ward politicians invariabty j use t Influen to have them trans- [ferred. 1 don't believe that a patrol man can «tay very long in any one pre- winks at érime and! ns Who are using mote private In- clyot. unless he mands In with poll Ithe pollce force, to torent, z | Immigrant Class to, Blame. | “Butt think abors all the present} wave oficrime Js due to the character of the immigratits we huve been recely- | ing Jn recent years. We are all imml: | grants, or the children of immigrants Immigeants made tis country. But th time has cpme when we should pick our immigrants. “According to statistics furnished by our public oMicers, 74 per cent. of the persons In the penitentiary and 68 p cent, of those In the workhouse we: of forelen birth. Upward of 90 ent of the native born In our prisona arg of orelgn parentage. “It ia a well-known fact that while criine In decreasing in Kurope tt ts alarm Ingly on the increase tn America, It tw plain to be seen what the cause of the orime wave ix, not only in New York City, but throughout the land Well-fed and Comfortable no matter how hot the day, on Grape-Nuts RPOOD There's a Reason.” | walls and meirors, va Utes the saloon wan almoat a wreck. FATAL INJURIES a | WSILTOFRERL eS UT, SCAMS {Man Known. Only John” Gets building, and a known only we everybody else seeme xpirits and tried to ay before they could inter: flying and glanaes Patrolman Hoyle on, maw Hi = from. ard the tumult, an « panic in the a! a ma to He cloyed the doors t most of the oceupal the floor he found with conscious head, 7 ‘Hospital, oth eve Hospital, where he wax found bonita heing lalu on:the stretcher| ton on the globe, ave a fracture at the base of th he begged for Dr. Placek nov to tell! The Rey ® outlined his thoughts 1 and serious scalp wounds, wit ha Wie Then ne caught alght of LIX !/on the present.era of rime to an Even-| death probably 4 matter of only a few ten-year-old boy, Jimmnie, who had jy. falrenarlerste Ma i hours aero taroncwith nia lumen: Het We. Wwoeld reporter to-fAas. Ele sald Ic is belleved he was hit with a chair, coe ene tad to nim and reperied his|. "Among the causes that have brought] aw several were found broken and cov: Tequeat that hix wife be not alarmed] about the crime wave may be named) ered with blood. If any one else wax ve iu 5 t Nir on{ Hutt le Kol away. Ona tin) he Ls the fact that our officials are off on] YT 2° Vix arrested on a charge of Lon theiner Vacations by the month, or rather! ¢ejonioua assault, although ft ia not Hoapiei who. adiminisiered1ie lust monihe. ata lume taxpayers aire] Known that te wtiuek “Big Joins: ! sacrament Tylad to nel a week oritwo off, but oir} biorls BY Wie poliés lo aacertain: the “Tam leaving a wife and. five chil- | HON) yictin'n name were unsuccessful. He Fea he dving ian tethe priest, | MkR-salaried officials, even when In the! way well dressed, and some of those and one of them js a ithe girk ten | city Tumble exceptions, def who wow him say he lives: somewhere old. She js going to be christened | yote io private affalsa than] in Seventh street, There were no pa- o-mortow. | want * alive tintil | pers on him by which he could be iden- Lined, NEW SECRETARY R BAY, L. 1, mevelt to A. Mottsmith of £ of Hawall, Mr. Mottsm mended for the place and by the reuring Sec Kinson. Gov. Frear sy a Mottamith will dsume i-drensed Big John. amashing and in a idred« of excited merry: eighboring cafes rash several wounds on his Injured man | ae r t OF HAWAII. Aug. 10.—Preai- yall. to be Secret Stern Brothers _ May Giallagher, seven years old. and Vber Witle knight errant, ‘T an fe pial Tt was feared the exposure ta i hi er i nat yan. | water might be serious. jaa Hine w ee Shittten who lige [pymmie ivan Winey We WRF Bul ar. \in the apartments.at No. out Willis ay hie eves he shamne-facedly, apbroached 5 | Hagher and. solemaly ‘sa | nue, Bronx, to-day’ .aat on the plér eat} May Gallagher * i | “Tm sorry, May. but the kitten wewt lathe toot’ ef (One Puindred: end], 18 petesin m B k | é FIERCE a Fr German d to be In jovial old a fight, but! fere chairn wore against w min- he Unton Markec Lace Curtains, Stores and Bed Sets A Special Sale is announced for Monday and Tuesday, August 12th and 13th Exceptionally Good Values Will Be Offered. West Twenty-third Street ; ON MONDAY, AUGUST 12h, WILL PLACE ON SALE AT DECIDEDLY LESS THAN THE USUAL PRICES, MARIE ANTOINETTE AND RENAISSANCE 7 LACE CURTAINS ESPECIALLY PREPARED FOR THIS OCCASION. WF Finh Aucune, 34th avd 35th Streets, New York. id there was reet of the saloon, nix had escaped “Big John un- was taken to ppolnied Ernest nth was by Gov. Frear retary, Mr. At. and Secretary | Mee qu Aug. 15. | NEW PUBLICATIONS. THE HIT OF THE TIME! The Newlyweds and| ~Their- Baby | By GEORGE McMANUS. Lithographed in colors on coated paper, Large quarto pages, 2 Price, $1.00. , moe Published by The New York World. Trade Supplied by the Saaléeld Publishing Co.; 156 Fifth Ave., New York. NEW PUBLICATIONS KNOW HOW MUCH YOU SPEND AND FOR WHAT YOU SPEND IT Deposit any sum you care to, usual. way-—to the money ) quick, smooth-runni pers; there is no w: THE IDEAL A iting for change, no delay. CHARGE ACCOUNT” DEPOSIT ACCOUNT! ! 34th to 35th St. sss) Accounts. Thousands of Satisfied Custom- ers Will T THOUSANDS of Macy Patrons Have Such ments of ,the account ‘will be mailed to you every| ously. Special Delivery Ser- vice for Deposit Account Patrons. SUMMER, to any the Mississippi Riv: estify Their Appreciation of the Ad- vantages of Such a System. What Those Advantages Are:— - { The Depositor has every CONVENIENCE of an ordinary “charge” account at a credit atore, every ECONOMY Macy’s STRICTLY CASH system affords, and, in addition, 4% interest on daily balances, compounded every three months, ) Make purchases in the| month. While a Deposit cannot be checked against y and have them charged in’ the unusual! for expenditures’made outside of the store, € you haye on deposit. It is aj no Banking business, the Depositor {s privileged to ng, ideal system for the shop-| withdraw any or all of his money at any ifthe, State-] There is no temptation to spend money promiscu- a ‘As an additional convenience for our Deposit Account patrons, we will DEL IVER FRE station in the United States east of er, PURCHASES CHARGED TO This applies only to ac DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS. counts in eaistence prior to May lat, s we do in + DURING THE